SANITIZING CLINTON: REPRESSING
THE LESSONS OF NON-HISTORY
by Murray Soupcoff
The
Iconoclast
June 11, 2002
The
current joint Senate-House committee hearings on the intelligence failings leading
up to the tragic events of 9/11 appear to be continuing a typical political
tradition on Capitol Hill -- spinning political wheels in the service of appearing
to do something, while accomplishing absolutely nothing. Nada. Zilch. Zero.
To this observer anyway, that's seems to be the best description of all the
manufactured sound and fury emanating from these current joint congressional
hearings into pre-9/11 intelligence failures.
The
biggest problem is that the hearings aren't "hearing" from the appropriate sources.
Everyone from the current lame-duck FBI director to the current know-nothing
Bush favorite who shepherds the CIA will be questioned. But for this joint congressional
committee, history oddly starts at the beginning of the Bush administration
(commencing on January 20, 2001). The history of miscues, failings and overall
ineptitude that characterized the intelligence community before that date --
under the neglectful watch of none of other than Bill "Bubba" Clinton (right)
-- seems to be of no interest to the committee, even though the roots of the
colossal 9/11 intelligence lapse obviously lie within that checkered historical
period.
As a result, Washington's political pros will undoubtedly leave no stone unturned
in discovering what the current FBI director knew or didn't know before Sept
11th, even though he was on he job for one week before the cataclysmic events
of 9/11 occurred. But the man who presided over the FBI information drought
through the key years during which the hijackers were meticulously planning
their misdeeds -- Louis Freeh -- won't be in evidence. As far as the joint Senate-House
committee is concerned, Mr. Freeh never existed.
Nor did the 1993 FBI electronic eavesdropping which produced the first firm
evidence that officials of Hamas and the Holy Land Foundation (an Islamo-fascist
charity quickly shut down by the Bush administration after 9/11) had met to
discuss raising funds for Hamas training schools and building up pensions for
the families of suicide bombers.
As a result, not a question will be posed as to why Mr. Freeh, or his superiors
in the Clinton White House, failed to shut down this growing American-based
infrastructure for would-be terrorists.
And of course, nary a word will be spoken about Bill Clinton's refusal to heed
advice from the FBI in 1996 to "prohibit fund-raising by Islamic terrorists
and identify terrorist organizations", as described by Dick Morris in his New
York Post column of January 2, 2002. According to Morris, who was there
as a close adviser to Bill Clinton, Clinton ignored those recommendations for
fear that such actions would be viewed as politically incorrect -- racial profiling
of Islamic charities.
But as far as the joint House-Senate committee is concerned, that all occurred
in some twilight zone of non-history, populated by non-persons who don't exist
anymore.
Speaking of non-persons (as defined by the joint Senate-House intelligence hearing),
there will naturally be no appearances on the hill by that devious little squirt
George Stephanopoulos (a close Clinton adviser at the time), or by bungling
former Attorney-General Janet Reno -- two of the Clinton administrations' strongest
opponents of going after Hamas supporters on American soil because of the possible
infringement of their "civil liberties" (please, no raucous laughter -- current
non-persons, Stephanopoulos and Reno, were entirely serious about this issue,
to the future detriment of a lot of innocent New Yorkers who were permanently
deprived of their civil liberties by the destruction of the World Trade Center).
According to Morris, similar 'civil liberty' and 'profiling' arguments were
made against a separate recommendation to require that drivers' licenses and
visas for non-citizens expire simultaneously, so that illegal aliens pulled
over in traffic stops could be identified and (if appropriate) deported. In
particular, little Georgie Stephanopoulos stressed the "potential abuse" of
such profiling and the political harm to the president's Hispanic base if such
measures were implemented.
Of course, as noted by Morris in his Post column, had the FBI recommendation
being adopted by Bill Clinton, Mohammed Atta might have been deported after
he was stopped for driving without a license three months before be piloted
an American Airlines jet into the World Trade Center .
And so it goes throughout this long, troubled era of Clinton-administration
non-history, as defined by the joint Senate-House committee. However, since
were dealing with non-history, there will be no questions asked about any of
these troubling episodes. Nor will any questions be posed regarding why after
being constantly warned that the Taliban regime was inextricably linked to Osama
bin Laden's al-qaeda network, William Jefferson Clinton still refused to consider
military action of any kind against the Taliban.
According to the joint committee, I suppose, none of that really happened (nudge,
nudge, wink, wink -- say no more). It's all just a bunch of non-history .
The problem is that no joint congressional hearing is going to get to the bottom
of the giant intelligence breakdown that "enabled" the 9/11 attacks if it's
going to politicize the whole process with a giant memory breakdown of its own.
Pretending that official history only began the day George Bush stepped into
office is akin to trying to confine an analysis of the causes of the Second
World War to the events of 1939, proceeding as if the Treaty of Versailles,
the Weimar Republic and the Great Depression had never occurred.
This joint hearing makes for good political theatre. And it will keep the mainstream
press happy with a stream of revelations about the keystone-cops antics of that
inept bunch of bungling Bush-appointed bureaucratic retreads who currently helm
America's key security agencies. But as far as getting to the heart of the problem
is concerned, this is obviously a very narrow and shortsighted inquiry.
According to an oft-quoted maxim, those who cannot learn from the mistakes of
history are compelled to repeat them. Sadly, that maxim no doubt also applies
to non-history too. ***
© 2002 The
Iconoclast
Murray Soupcoff is the author of 'Canada 1984' and a former radio and television producer with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. He also was Executive Editor of We Compute Magazine for several years, and is now the Managing Editor of the popular Canadian conservative Web site, Iconoclast.ca
COPYRIGHT © 2002 BY THE AMERICAN PARTISAN. All writers retain rights to their work.
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